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1838 Civil Rights Movement

1838 Civil Rights Movement

This timeline describes the events leading up to the 1838 Civil Rights Movement to prevent disenfranchisement. "The Franchise" is a colloquial term for the right to vote. When you are able to vote you are considered to be 'en-franchised'. Losing that right is called 'Dis-enfranchise-ment' The sources for this timeline are: Smith, E. L. (1998). The End of Black Voting Rights in Pennsylvania: African Americans and the Pennsylvania Constitutional Convention of 1837-1838. Pennsylvania History, 65(3), 279–299. Winch, J. (1988). Philadelphia's black elite : activism, accommodation, and the struggle for autonomy, 1787-1848. Temple University Press. Purvis, R. (1838). Appeal of Forty Thousand Citizens. In Pamphlet Collection. The present state and condition of the free people of color, of the city of Philadelphia and adjoining districts, as exhibited by the report of a committee of the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery, &c. Read first month (Jan.) 5th, 1838. (1838). McBride, D. (1979). BLACK PROTEST AGAINST RACIAL POLITICS: GARDNER, HINTON AND THEIR MEMORIAL OF 1838. Pennsylvania History, 46(2), 149–162. Gosse, V. (2021). A Large Body of Negro Votes. In The First Reconstruction. University of North Carolina Press. https://doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469660103.003.0001 The Pittsburgh Memorial https://journals.psu.edu/wph/article/download/4590/4393/4435 © 2023, 2024 by 1838 Black Metropolis. 1838 Black Metropolis research and writing by 1838 Black Metropolis 501c3, Michiko Quinones, Morgan Lloyd is licensed under Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International

1829-09-17 00:00:00

David Walker's Call to Action

David Walker writes an appeal that is a call to action for Black people to advocate for rights. “This country is as much ours as it is the whites, whether they will admit it now or not, they will see and believe it by and by.” (page 62). Walker’s Appeal spread widely up and down the Eastern seaboard

1830-09-15 00:00:00

1st Colored Convention Held in Philadelphia

The first of many national “Colored” conventions is held at Mother Bethel AME church in Philadelphia. Colored conventions bought together Black leaders from throughout the United States to align on issues such as abolition, suffrage and temperance.

1830-09-22 00:00:00

Black Men Voted in 1831 and 1832

Black men, including Stephen Smith, voted in Columbia, PA in 1832 (see Gosse, 123). There were also reports of Black men being turned away at the polls in 1830 and 1831.

1831-08-01 00:00:00

Nat Turner Rebellion

Nat Turner leads a liberation action to free enslaved people in South Carolina. White people in Pennsylvania react by introducing more legislation to restrict Black rights.

1831-12-17 00:00:00

House Bill (HB 446) introduced to restrict Black rights

Increased Black organization and political power causes white supremacist lawmakers to propose legislation to prevent rising Black power. Franklin Vansant introduces House Bill 446 to create stronger fugitive slave laws, ban Black emigration, and “regulate the conduct” of Black citizens.

1832-02-09 00:00:00

Black leaders Protest HB 446

Leaders of the Black community led by James Forten, Robert Purvis and William Whipper draw up a written statement (referred to as a ‘memorial’), opposing HB 446, arguing that they should have full rights as citizens as they are ‘freemen’ who pay taxes.

1834-06-02 00:00:00

Legislation Becomes a Focus

The early conventions focused on moral uplift through temperance and education and emigration to Canada.

1834-08-11 00:00:00

Mob Attacks on the Philadelphia Black Community Begin

The Black community in Philadelphia is attacked by white mobs for 4 days. 2 people were killed, 40 homes destroyed.

1835-10-01 00:00:00

William Fogg is Prevented from Voting and Files Suit

William Fogg, a Black property owner in Luzerne County, PA, attempts to vote. Hiram Hobbs, the elections inspector, turns him away. Fogg sues for his right to vote. The case eventually reaches the PA Supreme Court.

1837-01-16 00:00:00

Committee to 'Visit the Colored People' established

The Pennsylvania Abolition Society creates a committee to ‘Visit the Colored People’, perhaps in response to increasingly biased and false newspaper reporting about Black people

1837-03-15 00:00:00

James Forten Officially Proclaims his War Service

James Forten files a legal document that proves his service in the Revolutionary War. Historian Julie Winch has noted that this may have been a preemptive move to counter perceived upcoming threats to Black rights.

1837-05-01 00:00:00

PA Constitutional Convention-Harrisburg

The Pennsylvania legislature meets in Harrisburg to begin to make changes to the constitution. The right to vote is a key issue. Universal suffrage is proposed

1837-05-15 00:00:00

Proposal to Insert the Word "white" Before "freemen"

Fearing the rise of Black voting power, John Sterigere proposes to insert the word “white” in front of “freemen” in Article III of the PA Constitution. If approved, this would remove voting rights for all Black men in PA.

1837-06-05 00:00:00

Black Community Meets in Philly to Draft a Response

A large meeting is held at Mother Bethel AME church in Philadelphia to begin drafting a memorial to the proposal to remove Black voting rights. Charles Gardner and Frederick A. Hinton begin writing and complete the memorial with a few weeks but it is not officially submitted until six months later

1837-06-28 00:00:00

Pittsburgh Black Leaders Protest Through a Memorial

John B. Vashon, Joseph Mahonney, Samuel Ranyolds, Thomas Knox and Lewis Woodson submit a memorial providing legal arguments in support of Black voting rights. This memorial is called ‘The Pittsburgh Memorial’.

1837-07-01 00:00:00

Vashon and Woodson Observe the Reform Convention

The PA Constitutional Convention becomes known as ‘The Reform Convention’. After submitting the ‘Pittsburgh Memorial’, John B. Vashon and Lewis Woodson go to Harrisburg to observe the proceedings. They report the proceedings to Black community leaders in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.

1837-09-14 00:00:00

PA Constitutional Convention-Philadelphia

After the summer break, the constitutional convention reconvenes at Musical Fund hall, in the heart of Black Philadelphia.

1837-10-02 00:00:00

Black Men Vote in the Bucks County Election

30 to 40 Black men vote in the Bucks county elections, which may have led to the defeat of county Democrats.

1837-10-27 00:00:00

Bucks County Democrats File Suit Against Black votes

The white press claims the Black votes were ‘illegal’. They claim that Black men are not included in the ‘freemen’ definition of the PA Constitution. The Democrats file suit asking for the votes to be overturned.

1837-12-01 00:00:00

Judge Fox's Decision Against Black Voting Rights

Judge John Fox argues that Black votes don’t count and overturns the election. While he does look at intent of the PA founders when they wrote the 1790 constitution, his opinion is influenced by his belief, stated in the opinion, that Black people are “inferior”.

1838-01-05 00:00:00

1st Report on the 1838 Census Delivered

The Pennsylvania Abolition Society and Charles Gardner complete their analysis of census data collected in the year prior and distribute a report to delegates called “The Present State and Condition of the Free People of Color or Philadelphia”

1838-01-06 00:00:00

Gardner and Hinton Submit Their Memorial

The memorial written by Charles Gardner and Frederick A. Hinton is finally submitted to delegates. The memorial seeks to convince them of the moral, social and financial worth of the Black community.

1838-01-20 00:00:00

Delegates Approve Adding the Word "white"

The Reform Convention votes to insert the word “white” into Article III, Section 1. This defines “freemen” as white only effectively removing the right to vote from Black men. The constitution is changed but still must be ratified by the population of Pennsylvania in October.

1838-01-20 00:00:00

Black Leaders Forcibly Removed from the Reform Convention

JP Burr, James Forten, Jr., John B Vashon, Lewis Woodson and Thomas Butler are singled out due to their race and forcibly removed from the Reform Convention at Musical Fund Hall.

1838-01-24 00:00:00

Black Community Leaders Meet to Draft an Appeal

Black community leaders Robert Purvis, James Cornish, J.C. bowers, Robert B. Forten, J.J.G. Bias, James Needham and John P. Burr meet at St

1838-02-01 00:00:00

PA Supreme Court Rules William Fogg Not Eligible to Vote

The PA supreme court rules William Fogg cannot vote because he is Black. “Justice Gibson declared that because blacks were inherently inferior they could be excluded from the political process” (Smith, page 295).

1838-03-14 00:00:00

Appeal of the 40,000 Published

The ‘Appeal of the 40,000 threatened with Disenfranchisement’ is delivered first to the Black community at a meeting at First African Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia. It is then distributed widely to Pennsylvania citizens to convince them to vote ‘no’ to inserting the word ‘white’ in the constitution.

1838-03-23 00:00:00

2nd Report on the 1838 Census

A second printing of the ‘Report on the Present State and Condition of the Free People of Color of Philadelphia’ is printed and includes new information on beneficial societies and education. The report is distributed to the public.

1838-05-18 00:00:00

The Burning of Pennsylvania Hall

The newly built Pennsylvania Hall was the site of the Female Anti-Slavery Convention from May 15-May 18. On May 18, mobs attacked and torched Pennsylvania Hall and it was burned to the ground. There is evidence that municipal authorities allowed the structure to burn

1838-10-12 00:00:00

New Constitution Ratified

The PA Constitution is ratified by a close vote of 113971 FOR to 112759 AGAINST effectively disenfranchising Black voters.

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